Why ending illegal pregnancy discrimination is so hard
In 2018, Annika moved to a new job at a bank in Germany, to lead a risk management team. Six weeks later, she told the company she was pregnant. She offered to continue working up until she gave birth, even though she was legally entitled to go on paid leave well before then.
She reports her manager quickly switching from pleasant to harsh. She says he started to question her competence, and complained to other colleagues about her pregnancy. I slowly started to lose my nerve because the atmosphere became rather poisoned, and I really started to question myself.
When he started talking about firing her, she found a lawyer. This led to a years worth of negotiations about a severance package. The company was hoping I would quit by myself, Annika, now 34, explains. During my pregnancy I was pretty scared of the financial impact of getting fired and the impact on my career. I had a pretty bad nervous breakdown and couldnt stop crying for three months.
Discrimination due to pregnancy like Annika experienced is sadly common around the world. Even though its illegal in many nations, employers continue to demote, penalise or fire employees around the period of pregnancy. The discrimination can be overt or subtle, and in many cases structures and frameworks created to help women tackle it end up letting them down. This can have resounding psychological and financial impacts, in addition to the damage inflicted on their professional lives.
https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20220114-why-ending-illegal-pregnancy-discrimination-is-so-hard
_______________________________________________________________________
This article speaks of many nations. I invite your experiences.